Is there any more fucked up language than this shit?
>>58761492
It's more difficult than Turkish and Hebrew! Even Japanese is thought to be easier by foreigners.
Polish is butifel
>>58761492
>>58761492
Grammar isn't hard. Stop inflating your self-importance.
>>58765792
>>58765863
>>58761492
Hungarian is even easier, with a structure that's very similar to Turkish, Korean, Japanese. Those pictures only look scary if you're ignorant.
>w = v
>Ł = w
what the hell polen
>>58765919
>t. monolingualist
>>58761492
Git gud ty niedoedukowany matołku :-)
>>58766008
we wuz germanic n sheit
>>58765792
>prepositions pretending to be cases
Pozdrowienia.
>>58767425
>learning polish
for what purpose
just learn russian, it may actually be useful someday
>>58767511
>for what purpose
Because I like it and I don't like russian, I don't care if its useful or not
>>58767425
>Moja siostra Barbara ma 21 lat i studiuje ekonomię w Niemczech.
JUST
>>58767425
>talking about long dead relatives while introducing yourself
what the fugg :DDDD
>>58761492
Any fusional language is fucked up. What's your point?
>>58768442
OP's just another self-hating pole
>>58767425
>"pracuje jako fryzjerka"
>not "pracuje fryzjerką"
>>58772346
>works as a hairdresser
>works hairdresser
>>58761492
this looks a lot like russian grammar, how does it compare?
Please stop changing some consonants in case of celownik.
>>58772526
>works hairdresser
You can't differ instrumentalis from nominative and accusative?
>>58774012
w-what
im not good at grammar just telling you how it is
>>58774012
>pracuje fryzjerką
means
>I work with a hairdresser
As she was a tool or something. Very strange and unnatural.
For example
>jem widelcem = I eat with a fork
This is how instrumental works.
>>58774095
What I meant to say is that Russian uses the instrumental case (fryzjerkĄ ; you call it "narzędnik") here, while Polish replaces it with a conjunction "jako". It's quite interesting because Polish usually tends to use the cases more extensively.
co jest mati, kartkówka z polaka jutro i kolejny but? facetka zagro wystawi a mama komputer zabierze?
>>58775103
Oops sorry, actually
>pracuje
means he/she works, not I work, but its the same
>>58775103
It had more different meanings earlier though, it tends to last them from time to time. For example, Polish constructions like "iść plażą" sound strange for me too.
>>58775109
Because there are many ways to say that
>Pracuje jako fryzjerka
>She works as a hairdresser
jako (literally means as) + nominative
>Jest fryzjerką
>She is a hairdresser
instrumental
>>58775559
>iść plażą
In this case plaża is a "tool" or a "way" of doing iść activity.
It works a bit like japanese で particle
>>58761492
Anon, I...
>>58765792
>>58765919
>>58776970
Ie ha (house is)
Ie no (of house)
Ie ni (in house)
Ie he (to house)
Ie kara (from house)
Atatakai (warm)
Atatakakunaru (it becomes warm)
Atatakakunaranai (it doesn't become warm)
Atatakakunaranakatta (it didn't become warm)
Japanese looks like it's more similar to Hungarian than English and Polish?
>>58761492
I'm learning Russian and it's already hard enough, please no more
>>58779195
For what purpose
>>58779339
>бeгoвля
what?
>>58767682
Why study in poopyland
>>58779583
бeгoвaя жe.
Koham Pols kę
>>58778776
Because Japanese and Korean are thought to be some distant relatives of Altaic languages (Such as Turkish, Hungarian, Suomi etc.)
>>58776970
>>58778776
https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jap%C3%A1n%E2%80%93magyar_nyelvrokons%C3%A1g
There are strange similarities between Hungarian and Japanese. They are probably distantly related just like for example Polish and Sanskrit.
>>58780342
Polish and Sanskrit are related cuz they derive from Ancient Indo-European. And they're also from the same group.
Indo-European
Kentum: Satem:
Germanic Balto-Slavic
Celtic Indo-Persian
Romanic Greek and Armenian(??)
etc.
I fucked up with the text, a little bit
>>58774012
but that's not how instrumental works
>>58779655
why not
it would be easier if the lexicon (czszerzrzyscz etc) weren't so fucked up
it looks like it follows a pattern
>>58761492
You should have adopted Russian / Belarussian
>>58785004
You just have to learn pronunciation and spelling and it becomes easy.
sz = sh
cz = ch
rz/ż = voiced sz
etc
Other slavic languages have the same amount of consonants. Polish just looks different on paper because it uses archaic ortography.